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Randall P. Bezanson
Paperback - $37.95
In "How Free Can the Press Be?" Randall P. Bezanson explores contradictions embedded in understanding press freedom in America by discussing nine of the most pivotal and provocative First Amendment cases in U.S. judicial history.
Richard Clayton
Paperback - $224.95
This book provides a comprehensive and systematic treatment of human rights law and practice in the UK in relation to privacy and freedom of expression, including detailed analysis of the impact of the Human Rights Act 1998.
Kenneth C. Creech
Paperback - $86.95
As Media Law continues to grow as a hot topic those of you studying to be new lawyers in the media must keep on top of the latest laws and their implications. This book will keep you on your toes! It prepares you how to avoid common legal pitfalls an ...
Corey K. Creekmur
Hardcover - $133.95
This book crosses the conventional border between the analysis of on-screen and off-screen intersections of law and cinema. It not only addresses the representation of law on screen (for example, through discussions of how lawyers, police, and ...
Tom Crone
Paperback - $68.95
Tom Crone's classic text has been thoroughly revised by an impressive team of legal experts. It provides an essential source of reference for the key legal issues encountered by those who work in the media such as journalists, editors and producers, ...
Adam Epstein
Paperback - $160.95
Introducing a historical perspective in the music, radio, television, and motion picture industries, this book contains interrelated chapters that clearly and concisely expose readers to various legal issues among the segments of the entertainment in ...
Mike Feintuck
Paperback - $72.95
This substantially revised edition shows how the increased commercialization and privatization of British broadcast media poses a fundamental threat to "the public interest" as pressures of the marketplace transform traditional concepts of public ser ...
Scott Gant
Hardcover - $39.95
A provocative and engaging argument for affording bloggers and everyone else who disseminates information in the U.S. the same rights and privileges that traditional journalists enjoy.